The 17-year-old left-back is proving himself at St Mary's Stadium even sooner than expected and, as revealed by Goal.com, looks set for a switch to Stamford Bridge

PROFILEBy George Ankers

When Southampton teetered on the brink of financial oblivion in 2009, the whole of the Premier League must have been worried. Not out of any particular sympathy, of course – but the prospect of the south-coast club's famed academy disappearing for good would have been nightmarish.

Few teams have been mined for youthful resources as much as the Saints in recent years, a conveyor belt of top-level talent being churned out season after season.

Already an England Under-17s international, the teenage left-back has profited from the newly promoted side's defensive nightmares by being given a chance in the first team earlier than expected. Watch him on the pitch, though, and it seems a perfectly natural progression.

SHAW OF HIMSELF

PLAYER RATING v NORWICH | LUKE SHAW

Has slotted comfortably into the back four and, in stopping a counter from Snodgrass, showed a sense of calm sometimes lacking in defenders twice his age. Blocked most of the crosses from his wing and was rarely found wanting. Made a great intervention with half an hour to play, denying Snodgrass another goal. Gave Holt a shove in the back and got away with it, much to the pleasure of the home fans.

The obvious comparison is to Bale, who broke through as an attacking left-back at St Mary's Stadium before leaving for Tottenham and moving into midfield. There are similarities but where Shaw has shined in the Premier League so far is principally as a defender.

It took 13 games but Southampton's first clean sheet of the season came to Newcastle on November 25, the youngster adding confidence to a still slightly nervy back line.

Three days later, Shaw stepped things up again with a man-of-the-match showing against Norwich City. Doggedly blocking crosses all evening, the Kingston-born full-back was not intimidated by the imposing figure of Grant Holt, standing up to the target man in a defensive performance that did not deserve to be undone by Paulo Gazzaniga's goalkeeping error. Goal.com's awed man at the ground aptly hailed him as "fantaclismic".

Shaw is far from a limited, defence-minded left-back, however. His willingness to get forward is apparent and he has the quality to make an impact, too. Comfortable with the ball at his feet, the teenager can take it along the touchline at pace, making space for Adam Lallana ahead of him to cut inside.

He has not made it his trademark as Bale did when coming through the ranks but the 17-year-old is also competent as a set-piece taker, as well as having something of an eye for goal, with more strikes at youth level than your average full-back.

It is obvious why Chelsea are leading the race. With Ashley Cole's imminent departure seemingly the worst-kept secret in football, Shaw has all the qualities to succeed him.

He could undergo the conversion to midfield that Bale has done but left-back looks the most natural fit for his abilities. Whereas Ryan Bertrand is game and versatile, he is not spoken about in the same way by those in the know – Sir Trevor Brooking, who would know, hailed the Saints prospect as "technically very gifted".

There is plenty of developing to do – if a January move does materialise, it would surely be best for all concerned if Shaw were loaned back to St Mary's for the rest of the season at least.

With Chelsea believed to want him initially as an understudy to Bertrand, there will be concerns about him potentially rotting on the bench. After all, in Wayne Bridge, Southampton have already seen one of their talented left-back products stagnate at Stamford Bridge.

But Shaw has already proved this season that he will rise through when he is ready to do so. Whether or not the Saints can stay in the Premier League, expect him to rise even higher.